Follows the life of Helena (as should be expected) and her passively accepting the pains of various losses she suffers (nonchalant attitude of the emperor when he divorces her, or takes her son (Constantine) away from her for years).
Later in life she has her grandson (Crispus) and his tutor, Lactantius (a philosopher, historian, and writer), living with her. Lactantius is a Christian and he make a comment about form (style) and the right thing (truth) need to be paired up.
Then he goes on to say something that has simply got to be a diss at Edward Gibbon. Now, at the house of Helena there is a monkey (never specifies what type of monkey this is.. until...)
Lactantius states:
"Suppose that in years to come, when the Church's troubles seem to be over, there should come an apostate of my own trade, a false historian, with the mind of Cicero or Tacitus and the soul of an animal," and he nodded towards the gibbon who fretted his golden chain and chattered for fruit. "A man like that might make it his business to write down the martyrs and excuse the persecutors He might be refuted again and again but what he wrote would remain in people's minds when the refutations were quite forgotten. That is what style does - it has the Egyptian secret of the embalmers It is not to be despised"
